Rehabilitating and Resettling Offenders in the Community

Rehabilitating and Resettling Offenders in the Community book cover

Rehabilitating and Resettling Offenders in the Community

Author(s): Anthony H. Goodman (Author)

  • Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Publication Date: 13 July 2012
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 248 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0470990996
  • ISBN-13: 9780470990995

Book Description

Rehabilitating and Resettling Offenders in the Community is a significant examination of the historical development of work with offenders and their treatment by the state and society. It offers unique perspectives and a wealth of information drawn from numerous interviews with probation staff.

  • Highlights how the work of probation staff has changed over time and the reasons behind these changes
  • Includes discourse with probation staff carried out over many years for a comprehensive, ‘insiders’ view of the situation
  • Focuses on contemporary issues, including the changes brought in by the Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition
  • Written by a leading academic with extensive experience in the probation service

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Professor Goodman cares about the probation service but, more particularly, he cares about the way that our society responds to those who are vulnerable and disadvantaged, troublesome and in trouble. This concern, and his desire to see professional and compassionate rehabilitation and resettlement services, are clearly conveyed in his book.” (The Howard Journal of Criminal Justice, 6 January 2014)

“Given the unique combination of political and practice analysis, along with personal and practitioner experience, this book offers a valuable contribution to the understanding of probation in the rehabilitation and resettlement of offenders in the community. Practitioners are provided with the tools and prompts with which to reflect on their work, and academics are provided with the collective wisdom of practitioners in understanding the daily experiences and challenges of rehabilitative practice.” Probation Journal, June 2013

From the Inside Flap

This is a critical and current examination of the historical development of work with offenders and their treatment by both the state and society. In particular, the book highlights how this area of work has altered as professionals have lost much of their autonomy and ability to control their time as a result of political interference.

Goodman offers a unique and fascinating history of the after-care unit as an example of how good practice grew organically with both petty, persistent and ‘heavy end’ offenders.  It also illustrates how the demise of the unit was symptomatic of the centralisation of work with offenders which led to the loss of independence for professionals.

The book also offers an exclusive focus on the many changes in the national standards, which provides a theoretical understanding of the discourse on the relationship between the public in whose name supervision is being conducted, the supervisors, and the offender. The author has conducted interviews with key staff over many years and has accumulated a rich source of data which offers a unique ‘insiders’ view into the continuing changes within the service and the implications of these changes for the protection of the public.

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